PDR 3.0: POD DIVER RADIO podcast

Psycho-Motor Skills in Scuba Diving: A Discussion.

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On this episode of Pod Diver Radio, host Joe Cocozza sits down with longtime friend, cave diving buddy, and PADI big brain Karl Shreeves, Training Director at the Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI), to unpack a topic that underpins everything we do underwater: psychomotor skills in diving. Joe kicks things off by comparing his time on the BJJ mat to time underwater—how jiu jitsu forces you to integrate brain, body, and nervous system in real time—and asks Carl how that same idea applies to scuba and technical diving. From there, they dive into what psychomotor skills actually are, why "muscle memory" lives in your nervous system (not your quads), and how complex dive procedures become automatic over time, like riding a bike or nailing your buoyancy without thinking about it. Carl breaks down: The difference between motor skills and motor procedures (finning vs. air-sharing vs. valve drills) Why young divers often pick up skills faster—and what really holds many adults back How aging, injuries, and rotator cuffs affect tech skills like shutdowns and why sidemount can be a smart adaptation The role of habit, attitude, and learning interference in both good and bad in-water behavior Why under stress you default to your habits, not your "plan," and how to build the right automatic responses They also touch on neuroplasticity, language learning, freediving, yoga-style breath control, and how all of that crosses over into being a better, safer diver and instructor. If you're a dive pro, tech diver, instructor, or just a training nerd who wants to understand how people actually learn skills—and why some skills stick while others don't—this episode will give you a fresh lens on both your own diving and how you teach it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychomotor_learning

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